US6914396B1 - Multi-stage cavity cyclotron resonance accelerator - Google Patents
Multi-stage cavity cyclotron resonance accelerator Download PDFInfo
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- US6914396B1 US6914396B1 US09/921,529 US92152901A US6914396B1 US 6914396 B1 US6914396 B1 US 6914396B1 US 92152901 A US92152901 A US 92152901A US 6914396 B1 US6914396 B1 US 6914396B1
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- H—ELECTRICITY
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- H05H—PLASMA TECHNIQUE; PRODUCTION OF ACCELERATED ELECTRICALLY-CHARGED PARTICLES OR OF NEUTRONS; PRODUCTION OR ACCELERATION OF NEUTRAL MOLECULAR OR ATOMIC BEAMS
- H05H9/00—Linear accelerators
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H05—ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- H05H—PLASMA TECHNIQUE; PRODUCTION OF ACCELERATED ELECTRICALLY-CHARGED PARTICLES OR OF NEUTRONS; PRODUCTION OR ACCELERATION OF NEUTRAL MOLECULAR OR ATOMIC BEAMS
- H05H7/00—Details of devices of the types covered by groups H05H9/00, H05H11/00, H05H13/00
- H05H7/14—Vacuum chambers
- H05H7/18—Cavities; Resonators
Definitions
- the present invention relates to charged particle accelerators, and more particularly, to a cyclotron resonance accelerator having a multiple cavity stages with a uniform magnetic field across each stage in order to provides substantially increased efficiency.
- neutrons are capable of driving sub-critical reactors.
- Such sub-critical reactors use fissile nuclear fuel more efficiently, consume long-lived actinides and hence reduce the geologic storage problem relative to that of waste from conventional reactors.
- none of these accelerator applications is it important that the beam of particles is focused on a small spot as is the case for imaging X-ray tubes.
- a diffuse impact zone is an advantage because it helps solve an otherwise difficult thermal problem.
- linear acceleration In high-energy machines, linear acceleration is useful because it eliminates losses due to synchrotron radiation. In high-current machines, linear accelerators are useful because the loading of the beam on each cavity can be large compared to the losses in the cavity due to electrical resistance of the cavity material. This is particularly true for pulsed machines in which cavity losses are minimized by turning off the RF power between high-current beam pulses. In continuous-current machines, in which a requirement for a low-emittance, well-focused beam exists, the beam loading is so small that super-conducting cavities have had to be used to solve the cavity loss problem. Otherwise, circular machines in which the beam orbits in the same cavity many times are much more efficient because the beam loading is increased, relative to the losses, roughly in proportion to the number of times the beam passes through the cavity.
- the problem with circular machines is that the cyclotron frequency changes as the relativistic mass of the particle changes with energy.
- a particle is accelerated as long as the frequency of the accelerating voltage is below the relativistic cyclotron frequency of the particle in the magnetic field.
- the relativistic cyclotron frequency falls below the frequency of the “accelerating” voltage and the particle gives some of its energy back to the “accelerating” electric field.
- Jory and Trivelpiece accelerated electrons with 1000 volts of energy traveling along the axis of a TE 111 circular waveguide cavity to 500,000 volts of energy with momentum directed primarily in the circumferential direction. They used these electrons to generate millimeter wavelength radiation in another circular waveguide supporting a higher order mode.
- Hirshfield has built more sophisticated inverse CRM accelerators. He built an electron accelerator similar to the machine I described above except that the magnetic field increased along the axis of a waveguide supporting a TE 11 mode so that the Doppler shifted RF electric field maintained synchronism with the relativistic cyclotron frequency. This kind of machine is called a Cyclotron Auto-Resonance Accelerator (CARA).
- CARA Cyclotron Auto-Resonance Accelerator
- a high-current, high-gradient, high-efficiency, multi-stage cavity cyclotron resonance accelerator provides energy gains of over 50 MeV/stage, at an acceleration gradient that exceeds 20 MeV/m, in room temperature cavities.
- the multi-stage cavity cyclotron resonance accelerator includes a charged particle source, a plurality of end-to-end rotating mode room-temperature cavities, and a solenoid coil.
- the solenoid coil encompasses the cavities and provides a substantially uniform magnetic field that threads through the cavities.
- the MCCRA is provided with a constant magnetic field sufficient to produce a cyclotron frequency a little higher than the RF of the accelerating electric field.
- a plurality of input feeds, each of which are respectively coupled to a cavity, are also provided.
- the beam from the first cavity passes through a cutoff drift tube and is accelerated further with a cavity supporting a still lower radio-frequency electric field.
- This embodiment yields a proton beam with current over greater than 100 mA.
- the single cavity transfers about 70% of the radio-frequency energy to the beam.
- the magnetic field in the accelerator is substantially uniform across all stages, since an increasing field would lead to undesirable loss of axial momentum and stalling, while a decreasing field would lead to an unmanageable increase in orbit radius.
- Successive cavity stages of the accelerator will operate at successively-lower RF frequencies to maintain approximate resonance as the particle mass increases.
- the progressively lower frequencies are selected to decrease in substantially equal increments corresponding to a difference frequency.
- the charged particles are emitted in pulses in correspondence with the difference frequency.
- MCCRA multi-stage cavity cyclotron resonance accelerator
- FIG. 1 illustrates two stages in multi-stage high-gradient cavity proton accelerator
- FIG. 2 illustrates the computed variations of mean proton energy
- FIG. 3 a illustrates the energy gain for protons in traversing two cavities
- FIG. 3 b illustrates the projection in the transverse plane of the orbit of a proton undergoing acceleration as in FIG. 3 a;
- FIG. 3 c illustrates the projection in a longitudinal plane of the orbit of a proton undergoing acceleration as in FIGS. 3 a and 3 b;
- FIG. 4 illustrates the normalized mean energy and axial velocity for muons in a two-cavity cyclotron accelerator
- FIG. 5 illustrates an example of an accelerator with a coaxial dielectric liner
- FIG. 6 illustrates an example of a cross-section of a four-vaned RFDD structure for a proton cyclotron accelerator
- FIG. 7 is a chart illustrating a calculation of power for an eleven cavity accelerator having spaced cavity frequencies
- FIG. 8 illustrates the influence of finite bunch width on rms energy spread
- FIG. 9 illustrates acceleration history and evolution of rms energy spread in a two-cavity proton accelerator for three values of relative initial phase between fields in the two cavities.
- FIGS. 10 a , 10 b illustrates loci in x-y and y-z planes, respectively, for protons in a 5 nsec bunch at the end of the first cavity.
- the present invention is directed to a high-current, high-gradient, high-efficiency, multi-stage cavity cyclotron resonance accelerator (MCCRA).
- MCCRA multi-stage cavity cyclotron resonance accelerator
- the MCCRA provides energy gains of over 50 MeV/stage, at an acceleration gradient that exceeds 20 MeV/m, in room temperature cavities. Accelerated currents of over 100 mA can be obtained over a full multi-microsecond pulse, free of microbunches. Acceleration is provided via cyclotron resonance, so a strong static magnetic field is required.
- FIG. 1 An exemplary RF structure of the multi-stage high-gradient cavity proton accelerator is illustrated in FIG. 1 .
- the accelerator includes an ion source 1 , end-to-end TE 111 rotating mode room-temperature cavities 2 , 3 , and a solenoid coil 4 .
- Input feeds 6 , 7 are coupled to the cavities 2 , 3 , respectively.
- the solenoid coil 4 provides the substantially uniform magnetic field that threads through the cavities 2 , 3 .
- a DC voltage source 8 provides an accelerating voltage to the ion source 1 on the order of several kilovolts.
- the magnetic field in the accelerator must be substantially uniform across all stages, since an increasing field would lead to an undesirable loss of axial momentum and stalling, while a decreasing field would lead to an unmanageable increase in the orbit radius of the charged particle. It should be appreciated that the accelerator shown in FIG. 1 is simplified for ease of explanation, and that an actual accelerator may have many more cavity stages than the two shown in the figure.
- the first cavity 2 is driven with 10 MW of RF power at 100 MHz (f 1 ), and the second cavity 3 is driven with 7.7 MW at 94 MHz (f 2 ), via the respective input feeds 6 , 7 .
- successive cavity stages of the accelerator operate at successively-lower RF frequencies in order to maintain approximate resonance as the particle mass increases.
- Particle acceleration from 10 keV to 1 GeV requires an aggregate frequency reduction between the first and last cavity states of approximately a factor of two. This diminution in frequency is opposite to the temporally-increasing frequency variation typical for synchrotrons, where the magnetic field also increases.
- the beam power after the second stage is 13.4 MW.
- a uniform magnetic field of 67.0 kG threads both cavities.
- the injected proton beam energy is 10 keV, the final proton energy is 114.0 MeV and the proton current is 117.6 mA.
- the beam is assumed to have zero initial emittance and zero initial energy spread.
- Sixteen computational particles to simulate the beam are injected at time intervals of 1.25 nsec, corresponding to RF phase intervals of ⁇ /4 over two cycles at 100 MHz and to a pulse width of 20 nsec.
- the injected particles have zero initial radial coordinate.
- the small diminution in particle energy for z>200 cm is attributable to excessive phase slip, since the cyclotron frequency of the protons has fallen to below 94% of the RF frequency at this stage.
- the average acceleration gradient in the first cavity is 23.8 MeV/m. With a beam current of 117.6 mA, the efficiency of the first cavity is 70%.
- the strong axial acceleration gradient is possible since the protons make a large number of gyrations, and follow a long path moving nearly parallel to the rotating RF electric field. For this example, the protons execute about 48 turns in the first cavity, and reach a final gyration radius of about 17 cm. This rapid, efficient cyclotron resonance acceleration of protons in a TE 111 cavity with a uniform magnetic field is reminiscent of similar results reported for electrons by Jory and Trivelpiece, who showed evidence of acceleration by hundreds of keV.
- FIG. 3 a shows the energy gain and axial velocity for two exemplary cavities operated in tandem.
- the second cavity operating at 94 GHz, has a radius of 110 cm and a length of 302 cm.
- the relative phase difference between fields in the first and second cavities is set at 0.70 ⁇ , the value that was found to maximize energy gain in the second cavity.
- FIGS. 3 b and 3 c show projections in the transverse (x-y) and longitudinal (x-z) planes of the orbit of a single proton during the course of its acceleration. Specifically, FIG. 3 b illustrates a projection in the transverse plane of the orbit of a proton undergoing acceleration as in FIG. 3 a . FIG. 3 c illustrates a projection in the longitudinal plane of the orbit of a proton undergoing acceleration as in FIGS. 3 a and 3 b . The proton executes about 90 turns during acceleration.
- FIG. 4 shows an example for two cavities in a uniform 67.0 kG B-field, for parameters as follows:
- the 100 MHz and 94 MHz TE 111 cavities for the example of the first two stages of the proton accelerator shown in FIGS. 2-4 have diameters of 220 cm, yet the maximum proton orbit diameters are 34 and 44 cm. At least in these first stages, most of the cavity volume is not traversed by the proton beam, but is permeated with magnetic flux lines from the surrounding solenoid coils.
- the required 67 kG cryomagnet would need a room-temperature bore diameter of perhaps 240 cm (to allow room for the RF feeds, as shown in FIG. 1 ). While this is probably within the present state-of-the-art, it would be highly desirable to reduce this bore diameter.
- the cavity diameters are reduced by using dielectric loading in the form of thick coaxial dielectric liners 9 , 10 .
- Analysis of the dispersion relation for the HEM 11 mode showed, for example, that a 100 MHz cavity with TE 11 -like fields in the interior vacuum hole could have a significantly reduced overall diameter.
- the outer diameter would be about 84 cm.
- Successive cavities would of course be larger, as their resonant frequencies decrease and as their hole diameters increase to accommodate the increasing radius of the gyrating beam.
- a drawback of the presence of alumina within a high-power cavity structure is that it could lead to breakdown problems, and the extreme weight and cost of such large alumina elements would also be disadvantageous.
- thick radial vanes 62 are employed in the cavity that provide capacitive loading and thereby reduce the cutoff frequency for the desired dipole modes. It should be noted that only one-half of the structure is shown in FIG. 6 , after cutting along the vertical axis of symmetry. When four symmetric vanes are used, the two dipole modes are 90° out of time and spatial phase with respect to one another. To obtain a rotating (i.e., circularly polarized) field, these two dipole modes are excited in time-quadrature.
- the structure can be labeled a radio-frequency double-dipole (RFDD).
- RFDD radio-frequency double-dipole
- a simple example of a RFDD structure has been analyzed using HFSS structure simulation code; results are shown and incorporated in FIG. 6 . It can be seen that the electric field lines for the dipole mode are nearly uniform near the axis.
- the cutoff frequency for the dipole mode was found to be 73.7 MHz, while the cutoff frequency for the quadrupole mode was found to be 78.97 MHz.
- a section of RFDD structure 222 cm in length would have a dipole resonance frequency of 100 MHz and a quadrupole resonance frequency of 104 MHz. Operation with Q L of the order of 1,000-10,000 should thus be possible purely in the dipole mode, without significant coupling by the beam to the quadrupole mode.
- protons drift from one TE 111 cavity to the next, but successive cavities must have lower resonance frequencies in order to effect cumulative acceleration since the imposed axial magnetic field is uniform and the effective proton mass is increasing.
- acceleration through a cascade of cavities provided the phases for fields in each cavity are properly adjusted. Specifically, as the proton bunch arrives at each cavity, maximum acceleration is achieved if the orientation of the electric vector of the rotating TE 111 mode is parallel to the proton momentum.
- uniform acceleration of a train of proton bunches can occur only if the phases of disparate frequencies in successive cavities are judiciously sequenced to insure that all bunches have identical histories as they progress through the cascade.
- the cavity frequencies are arranged to decrease in equal increments.
- the frequency decrease increment may be selected to be 5 MHz
- the cavity frequencies may be selected to be 100, 95, 90, 85, . . . 50 MHz.
- the proton beam would be pulsed at the difference frequency between successive cavities (e.g., 5 MHz) such that bunches of protons enter each cavity at a time in which the electromagnetic fields in the cavity have aligned in a certain way.
- the initial phases of the fields in each cavity may thus be arranged to provide optimized cumulative acceleration to the first proton bunch.
- the cavity cascade has features in common with a conventional RF linear accelerator, or linac, that generates a beam of highly energized particles by propelling them in a straight line with energy from an electromagnetic field.
- FIG. 7 provides a chart that illustrates a calculation of power for an eleven cavity accelerator having spaced cavity frequencies as described in the above example. For each cavity, the chart shows the initial and final proton energy ( ⁇ ), the proton velocity ( ⁇ ), the beam load, the total beam power, and the orbit radius. At the beam power levels identified in the chart, the cyclotron frequency will be closest to the cavity frequency at any point within the device.
- FIG. 8 illustrates the effects of finite proton bunch width.
- E acceleration is independent of the time of injection. But, due to the phase dependence of acceleration in the second cavity, energy spread increases with pulse width.
- parameters for the first cavity at 100 MHz are as described above with respect to FIGS. 2-3 c .
- parameters in the second cavity at 94 MHz are also as described above, except for small variations in Q L and final average beam energy.
- Q L would be 13,200, 13,600 and 17,000, respectively
- final average beam energy would be 116.2, 116.0 and 114.0 MeV, respectively.
- the relative initial phase difference between fields in the two cavities is 0.70 ⁇ .
- the final energy spread is approximately 2%.
- FIG. 9 illustrates the influence of relative phase difference upon beam energy spread.
- acceleration history and evolution of beam rms energy spread are plotted for three values of relative phase shift, namely 0.65 ⁇ , 0.70 ⁇ , and 0.75 ⁇ . It is seen that a final rms energy spread of about 0.7% is found for the 0.75 ⁇ case, which is lower by nearly a factor of three than the 0.70 ⁇ case.
- the second cavity Q L is 16,500, 13,200, and 11,600, respectively, and the final average beam energy is 114.2, 116.2 and 117.3 MeV, respectively.
- FIGS. 3 b and 3 c show the orbit for a typical proton, but the instantaneous distribution of charge for a finite-length bunch does not lie along this curve since orbits of successive protons are rotated in the x-y plane at the RF frequency.
- the particles are seen to lie along a nearly straight line approximately 4.8 cm long, with a deviation from linearity of less than 0.4 mm. These particle loci can be contrasted with the trace in x-z for the first particle during its final 4.8 cm of travel, which is a half-cycle of oscillation with radius of approximately 17 cm, as shown in FIG. 3 c .
- the proton bunch advances in the z direction and rotates about the z axis nearly as a straight rigid object.
- the small deviations from linearity arise from phase slip between proton momenta and the RF electric field, and from small energy differences between the head and tail of the bunch.
- the near uniformity of the axial charge distribution within such a long bunch should mitigate against longitudinal instability.
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Abstract
Description
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- first cavity: f=850 MHz, P=10 MW, Qo=40,000, QL=20,000, R=13 cm, L=29 cm;
- second cavity: f=700 MHz, P=4.0 MW, Qo=40,000, QL=10,000, R=15 cm, L=39 cm.
Acceleration in the first cavity is from 10 keV to 23.24 MeV, and thence in the second cavity to 37.1 MeV. The beam current is 215 mA, maximum orbit radius is 3.8 cm, average acceleration gradient is 54.4 MeV/m, and overall efficiency is 57%. These values compare favorably with conventional muon linacs.
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US09/797,434 US6617810B2 (en) | 2000-03-01 | 2001-03-01 | Multi-stage cavity cyclotron resonance accelerators |
US09/921,529 US6914396B1 (en) | 2000-07-31 | 2001-07-31 | Multi-stage cavity cyclotron resonance accelerator |
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US20090177440A1 (en) * | 2008-01-09 | 2009-07-09 | William Bertozzi | Diagnostic methods and apparatus for an accelerator using induction to generate an electric field with a localized curl |
US20090174509A1 (en) * | 2008-01-09 | 2009-07-09 | William Bertozzi | Methods and systems for accelerating particles using induction to generate an electric field with a localized curl |
US8003964B2 (en) | 2007-10-11 | 2011-08-23 | Still River Systems Incorporated | Applying a particle beam to a patient |
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